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This topic describes the overall portlets layout and features that you can utilize within the Administration Console.
The Geronimo Administration Console is a Web based interface that provides a convenient, user-friendly way to administer many aspects of the Geronimo server. After you have the Apache Geronimo server started (see Starting and stopping the server), you can access the Administration Console by navigating your browser to the following URL:
The Administration Console login page is depicted in the following figure.
Log in by specifying system as the username and manager as the password. After you are logged in, you will be redirected to the console's welcome page. The console has two main areas, a navigation panel on the left and a main content area on the right.
The navigation panel on the left provides easy access to the individual tasks. It is always present and allows easy transition from task to task. The main content area on the right is where the real work happens. This area will change as you select the different tasks in the navigation panel on the left. Each view contains one or more portlets that typically include a link for help in the header. See the following figure as an example.
As briefly explained in the previous section, the navigation panel provides access to the different tasks for administering resources in Geronimo. It also provides two modes for listing these tasks, Basic and Advance. Select the Basic or Advance radio button on the top of the console navigation panel to switch a configuration between the two modes.
#Searchbar
The Search bar provides convenient searching capabilities to locate portlets on the navigation panel. Type in the search field and press enter.
This is the welcome page that you see when you log in. It provides a general description of what the Geronimo Administration Console is and some shortcut links to common tasks such as:
This page also provide links to:
Organized under the Application Server group, you will find statistical information and support for configuring and administering the server. This group is organized as follows:
#System Information
#Web Server
#EJB Server
#Derby Server
#Shutdown
Organized under this group you will find links for the following portlets:
#Server Information
#Java System Info
#Thread Pools
This portlet displays server information such as the version, start time and up time. In addition, it also provides information about the JVM such as Java Version, Vendor, Node, and Server Memory Usage.
This portlet displays the values of the system properties available to the server process.
This portlet lists all the thread pools defined in the server. You can see the pool size and monitor individually each of the listed thread pools with this portlet. By monitoring these threads, you can gather statistical information such as pool max, lowest recorded, highest recorded, and threads in use.
This option provides two portlets, Web Server Manager and Network Listeners.
This portlet provides all EJB statistics deployed in the server including stateless(stateful) Containers, CMP(BMP) Entity Containers and Message Driven Containers. By default, Geronimo is using Openejb as its EJB 3.0 implementation.
Organized under this group you will find links:
This portlet displays information about the internal database, such as:
This option provides two portlets, DB VIewer and Run SQL.
Clicking Shutdown will shutdown the server and cause the JVM to exit. To continue using the Geronimo Console after a shutdown, you must restart Geronimo.
This option provides two portlets, JMS Server Manager and JMS Network Listeners.
Organized under this group you will find links for installing and administering applications.
#Deployer
#User Assets
#Plan Creator
This portlet allows you to deploy new applications to the Apache Geronimo server. For example, a Web applications requires a deployment plan, which is either packaged within the war file with the name geronimo-web.xml
, or kept as a separate XML file that is deployed by using the Plan field in the Deployer portlet. See Deploying applications Via Geronimo Administration Console for more information on using the Deployer function.
Organized under this group you will find links for the following portlets:
#Web App WARs
#Application EARs
#EJB JARs
#App Clients
#Aries EBAs
#OSGi Bundles
This portlet displays the installed Web applications and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available Web applications. This portlet provides the following two options that help manage Web applications:
This portlet displays the installed Application EARs and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available application EARs.
In addition, this portlet makes use of the Expert Mode and Show parent and child components features as described here.
This portlet displays the installed EJB JARs and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available EJB JARs.
In addition, this portlet makes use of the Expert Mode and Show parent and child components features as described here.
This portlet displays the installed Application Clients and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available application clients.
In addition, this portlet makes use of the Expert Mode and Show parent and child components features as described here.
This portlet displays the installed Application EBAs and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available application EBAs.
This portlet displays the installed Web Application Bundles and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available application bundles.
This portlet features assisting you in creating a Geronimo Deployment Plan. Currently only supporting WAR files. For details visit the Creating deployment plans using the deployment plan wizard section. Starting from v2.2, this portlet is optional, you can enable it by installing a plugin from Geronimo repository.
Organized under this group you will find links for configuring the following services:
J2EE Connectors
#JAR Aliases
#Repository
#Apache HTTP
#System Modules
#Plugins
#OSGi Bundles
#Datasources
#JMS Resources
This portlet displays the installed J2EE connectors and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start and, uninstall the available J2EE Connectors.
In addition, this portlet makes use of the Expert Mode and Show parent and child components features as described here.
This portlet allows you to manage the existing artifact aliases on the Geronimo server, which means you can update the artifact_aliases.properties
file directly on the administration console.
This portlet provides two functionalities. Firstly, it assists in adding an archive into the Repository. Secondly, it displays the artifacts installed in the server's repository. The layout of the repository is the same as that used by Apache Maven, which makes it possible to easily copy files over. From this portlet, you can install new artifacts. To use these artifacts in an application, you need to modify your deployment plan according to Define the dependency in the deployment plan. For more information on using the repository portlet, see Update the repository with new library.
This portlet is a wizard that walks you through the process of configuring Apache Geronimo to use a remote Apache 2 HTTP server. To configure the remote HTTP server, you need to install the mod_jk Apache module on the remote server. Based on a series of questions, the wizard will guide you through the configuration process. See Configuring a remote Apache HTTP server for two alternative ways to configure a remote Apache HTTP server.
This portlet displays the installed System Modules and their status. From this portlet, you can stop, start, and uninstall the available System Modules.
In addition, this portlet makes use of the Expert Mode and Show parent and child components features as described here.
This portlet allows you to install or create Geronimo plugins. From this portlet, you can install the plugins available in the remote plugins repository you selected, or export to plugins just about any module you have already installed in Geronimo. In addition, you can create custom assembly server packages built with only the modules you specify. For more information on using the plugins portlet, see Converting applications into plugins using the Administration Console.
This portlet allows you to install OSGi Bundles to the Apache Geronimo server. You can define a start level for the bundle you install by inputting a non-negative integer into the Start Level field.
This portlet displays the installed OSGi Bundles and their status in the table under the installation area. Double click one bundle in the table, you will see the content of the MANIFEST.MF file of the bundle. From this portlet you can stop, start, and uninstall the available bundles in this table. For more information, see Managing OSGi Bundles.
This portlet displays all the available database pools and their status. Only server-wide database pools can be edited in this portlet. For database pools deployed as part of a single application, you will have to change the deployment plan in the application to edit these database pools.
From this portlet you can edit the available, system-wide, database pools. A usage link with examples of how to use the pool from your application is also provided.
This portlet includes a database pool creation wizard for new pools and also lets you import database pools from JBoss 4 and WebLogic 8.1.
This portlet lists all the JMS resource groups and states available in the Geronimo server, that is queues and factories. From this portlet, you can create new JMS resource groups. This portlet provides two wizards, one for ActiveMQ and one for another JMS provider. For the latter, you will have to provide the specific resource adapter RAR needed to connect to that particular provider.
#Users and Groups
#Keystores
#Certificate Authority
#Security Realm
This option provides two portlets, Console Realm Users and Console Realm Groups.
This portlet walks you through the process of configuring keystores to use with SSL connectors. From this portlet, you can add or edit keystores, add Trust Certificates, and create private keys. See the Administering certificates section about how to create a keystore and a private key with the keystores portlet. See the Certificate Properties File Realm about how to create and import certificates.
This portlet allows you to create a Certification Authority (CA) in Geronimo and issue certificates in reply to Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs). Click here for more detailed instructions.
This portlet displays all available security realms and their status. Only server-wide security realms can be edited in this portlet. Security realms deployed as part of a single application cannot, and you will have to change the deployment plan in the application instead.
From this portlet you can edit the available, system-wide, security realms. There is also a usage link with examples of how to use the realm from your application.
This portlet also includes a security realm creation wizard for creating new realms. For more information on using the security realm portlet, see Administering security realms.
Organized under this group you will find links for:
#Logs
#Debug Views
#Monitoring
Organized under this group, you will find links for the following item.
This option provides the following portlets: Log Manager, Server Log Viewer, and Web Access Log Viewer.
For more information, see Configuring log level.
Back to Monitoring and Troubleshooting
The Geronimo monitoring plugin is broken down between server and client plugins, referred to as the 'Agent' and 'Console' respectively. When properly set up, these plugins provide both local and remote real-time JSR77 compliant statistic monitoring, and historical tracking of any exposed statistic with visual representations drawn in the form of graphs through the Dojo Toolkit's dojoX Charting packages. Starting from v2.2, this portlet is optional, you can enable it by installing a plugin from Geronimo repository.
Organized under this group you will find links:
#JMX Viewer
#LDAP Viewer
#ClassLoader Viewer
#JNDI Viewer
#Dependency Viewer
This portlet provides a tree like representation for you to browse the different types of MBeans. Each MBean will be represented as a tree node that shows its object name representation. All MBeans will give you a list of MBeans grouped by its domain.
This portlet lets you connect to any LDAP server, and browse its content but not edit it. This portlet comes predefined to access the LDAP embedded in Geronimo, make sure the service is running before you connect to the server.
This view can be used to all the classloader involved in the server and the classes it loads.
This view can be used to view JNDI context for various modules.
This view can be used to view all the modules and its dependencies.
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